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Jacinda Ardern is next prime minister of New Zealand (after 9 years of right wing)

Terrell

Member
Jacinda-Trudeau shipping coming up.

FUCK YEAH, NEW ZANADA!!

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But serious good tidings to you, New Zealanders, hope this works out well for you.
 
The Kansas article calling them the Liberals is cringe.


Anywho, I'm glad there's been a change of government, very dangerous to have anybody in power in NZ for too long. They get... Complacent

The conversion is probably necessary since social democrats likely sounds to much like Socialist for an American audience but yeah it's odd hearing Labo(u)r and the Greens referred to as liberals (especially to an Australian).
 
I'm surprised they partnered with NZ First. They alignment more with National when it comes to foreign policies and I'm not a fan of NZF either way.

Labour and Green totally mesh though.
 
I'm surprised they partnered with NZ First. They alignment more with National when it comes to foreign policies and I'm not a fan of NZF either way.

Labour and Green totally mesh though.

Its not that surprising, no one will enter into a minority Government until it presents a chance of power when they jump. Australia has had at least one Liberal / Green state government.

Smaller personality based parties are generally pretty sensitive to the direction of the political wind too, as well as what concessions they can extract.
 

Alienfan

Member
I'm surprised they partnered with NZ First. They alignment more with National when it comes to foreign policies and I'm not a fan of NZF either way.

Labour and Green totally mesh though.

I think you'd be surprised how much all three parties share in common. Even the Green party's policies aren't that much different than New Zealand First (for two parties on supposed opposite ends of the spectrum). National are really the only party campaigning on neo-liberal ideas, which really goes against most of what NZ First promised.
 

Cynar

Member
I believe since Obama's reelection in Nov 2012, only the following democracies have gone from a conservative to a center-left government.

Italy
Chile
Portugal
Canada
South Korea
Taiwan
New Zealand

Might be forgetting some, and this could be very western-centric.
Obama would be considered very far right in most of those countries. The US is pretty messed up politically.
 
Obama would be considered very far right in most of those countries. The US is pretty messed up politically.

That's probably overselling it a tad bit don't you think ? I mean the Democrats aren't going to qualify as economically left wing in almost any of those places but they aren't Theocrats, or Dictators .
 
That is great, but let's wait until the vote before celebrating. Never underestimate conservatives to make polls lie.

edit: wait, is it official? This is not speculation?
 

Hypron

Member
Quite happy with this result. I mean, I could do without Winston, but I party voted Green and voted Labour for my local MP.

That is great, but let's wait until the vote before celebrating. Never underestimate conservatives to make polls lie.

edit: wait, is it official? This is not speculation?

The election was last month haha. We were just waiting for New Zealand First to decide which party to go into a coalition with to form a government (either Greens+Labours or National).
 
All these young 30 something leaders making me feel even more like a loser.

Ah, y'know. Would that actually be something you'd want to do? And do well, in order to keep your reputation intact? Hell of a lot of work. No time for games and the internet.
 
good luck to her and labor. the left needs a few wins. It's tough running minority governments (as the tories are finding out here, lol) though so I fear the pendulum will swing back straight away in 2020. But she seems to be well liked so hopefully she can win over more people in government.
 
Man, I want to move to New Zealand so bad. My wife was a finalist for a professor job at Victoria University but ended up not getting it. Music jobs are hard enough to come by in the US let alone NZ.
 
In Taiwan the situation is much more complicated and I'd be very hesitant to lump it in with all of the others. My GF is from Taiwan and I lived there for a while. I read Taiwanese news regularly and have been watching Tsai with a lot of intrigue.

While there is some degree of progressive vs conservative, the over-riding political axis is closer to China vs less dependent on China.

It's very complicated. South Korea as well (because of corruption more than necessarily a shift in the public's thinking).

Yeah I almost didn't put it in there, but I felt given Tsai's general politics might as well.

Obama would be considered very far right in most of those countries. The US is pretty messed up politically.
lol no.
 

Tiktaalik

Member
Oh interesting. I totally stopped following this after the election result. I just assumed that National would be able to continue governing.
 
Obama would be considered very far right in most of those countries. The US is pretty messed up politically.
No he fucking isn't. Centrist you can have, but far right, fuck no.

Then again, I've seen people with no knowledge of NZ politics unironically say that National is left of the Democrats.
 
coalitions, how do they work

In Australia , the Liberals and Nationals are basically a permanent coalition , to the point that only half the states have both parties present these days. The Australian often forgets this (because the Liberals would almost never hold Government otherwise).
 
TBH, all I know about this coalition is that it was possible because Labour adopted an anti-immigration and protectionist platform.

To say that that's why Winston went with them without knowing the contents of the negotiations is a pretty ignorant claim don't you think? I mean, not to defend Winston because he's an old sod, but I think it's more likely that they went with Labour because National actively tried to undermine NZF's campaign and Winnie holds grudges.
 

JJDubz

Member
Beyond the right and left spectrum, it is good to see (relatively) youthful people being elected to major positions.

Dinosaur 70-80 year olds writing legislature in the modern world is insanity.
 

Cocaloch

Member
Bonus :
The UK hasn't had a prime minister younger than 40 since 1732 (lol)

That was also the first prime minister. Of course, Britain has also had a stable state for far longer than any of those countries, or really any other extant state, take from that what you will...
 
TBH, all I know about this coalition is that it was possible because Labour adopted an anti-immigration and protectionist platform.

Get your facts straight before shouting from the sidelines. Labour isn't anti-immigration, just anti-rampant immigration, something National has used to bolster the economy at the expense of our infrastructure, environment and services. Shit's a mess right now.

Note that while National are in favour of rampant immigration, their support of refugee programs is pathetic.
 

Alienfan

Member
Get your facts straight before shouting from the sidelines. Labour isn't anti-immigration, just anti-rampant immigration, something National has used to bolster the economy at the expense of our infrastructure, environment and services. Shit's a mess right now.

Note that while National are in favour of rampant immigration, their support of refugee programs is pathetic.

Labour were also promising to increase the refugee quota.
 

Window

Member
I haven't kept up with NZ news for a while but I'm curious as to how immigration has benefited the economy while also being the cause of negative impact on infrastructure, services and the environment.
 

Hypron

Member
I haven't kept up with NZ news for a while but I'm curious as to how immigration has benefited the economy while also being the cause of negative impact on infrastructure, services and the environment.

One thing I remember reading on the Labour policy website is that most immigrants move to Auckland, but there's a bad housing crisis in Auckland. Like, fewer houses are being made than New Zealanders are moving to the city - without even taking immigrants into accounts.
 
Bit of a dumb question but how do you pronounce Jacinda?

Is it Jah-Sin-Dah or is the J silent, like Hah-Sin-Dah?

First time I'm hearing this name.
 

Window

Member
One thing I remember reading on the Labour policy website is that most immigrants move to Auckland, but there's a bad housing crisis in Auckland. Like, fewer houses are being made than New Zealanders are moving to the city - without even taking immigrants into accounts.
I would think policies which tackle supply and manage demand by incentevizing migration to other cities than ones which attempt to restrict demand might be more beneficial. I guess there's more severe issues though which are driving people's opinions.
 
I've been thinking it'd be nice to move to New Zealand. Dunno how feasible it would actually be, though.

It's easy if you're considered highly skilled in a field with shortage. I believe they're pegging highly skilled workers as people who can pull 72k annual, among other things.

I would think policies which tackle supply and manage demand by incentevizing migration to other cities than ones which attempt to restrict demand might be more beneficial. I guess there's more severe issues though which are driving people's opinions.

They tried, albeit lightly. Applicants get bonus points when applying for work outside Auckland. They also tried paying families a couple thousand to move out of Auckland.

The problem is that the jobs are in Auckland. They need to give incentives to start businesses outside of Auckland. A lot of people want to move out because of the housing prices but they won't find jobs elsewhere. I myself wanted to move to Dunedin, but there's like nearly no opportunity for ICT compared to Auckland, Welly or even CHC.

Auckland infrastructure just needs a few years to catch up. The rail is set to finish I think 2019 or 2020 which should encourage public transport.
 

Window

Member
Yes, I realise a large concentration of jobs are in Auckland and a large part of the solution is to encourage business in other areas of NZ. However I don't think of immigration as the root cause of this problem.
 
Labour were also promising to increase the refugee quota.

Yeah, it was on the Greens agenda as well and is absolutely needed, as a number of our Pacific neighbours are already suffering from the effects of global warming. Stuff recently had a really good article on the struggles Kiribati's facing, which we are helping out a little but nowhere near enough (especially given the UK, Aus and NZ's history of strip mining one of their islands).

I would think policies which tackle supply and manage demand by incentevizing migration to other cities than ones which attempt to restrict demand might be more beneficial. I guess there's more severe issues though which are driving people's opinions.

You don't think they've tried? Auckland's bigger than our next 6 largest cities combined, so there's far more jobs, resources and minority communities there than anywhere else.
 
Yeah, the country's issues can't really be caused any single factor. You can drop immigraton to 0 but that won't stop speculators flipping houses multiple times in one day.

New Zealand also genuinely needs skilled immigration. I've overseen interviews where local candidates just don't have the skillset we needed.
 
Get your facts straight before shouting from the sidelines. Labour isn't anti-immigration, just anti-rampant immigration, something National has used to bolster the economy at the expense of our infrastructure, environment and services. Shit's a mess right now.

Note that while National are in favour of rampant immigration, their support of refugee programs is pathetic.

Yeah, like I said, it's complicated. I wouldn't say Labour is racist, because unlike what's going on with the GOP and in the UK, there are actually reasons behind their policies that aren't "I'm a raging bigot and I hate brown people".

Now that being said. NZ First is very legitimately xenophobic, in a way that CAN'T be justified by that alone. However I am very pleased that he went with Labour, but I think it's a "broken clock" kind of deal.
 
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